After Skyfall: 10 Future Predictions For The James Bond Franchise

By Andy Scott /

6. Intimacy Indifference

While the kill count has gone up with subsequent generations of Bond, the amount of women €˜tallied up€™ by the actors has taken a marked decline since Moore€™s lothario. It€™s likely that this is a sign of the franchise€™s attempts to get away from the (unavoidably) misogynistic stereotype of the Bond novels but there€™s also reason to believe that there will be less intimacy too. Whereas it has often been film Bond€™s prerogative to fall somewhat €˜in love€™ (certain unromantic pedants may take issue with this but we€™re being jovially nonchalant here) with his €˜girl€™, in the books Bond takes less of an intimate line of sight. At one point he even looks upon a strange beauty and plots the sequences of their hypothetical affair from slap up meal to inevitable doorstep slap weeks later as he breaks the news of his boredom with her; ultimately he decides not to bother making the effort. Much like Sherlock Holmes€™ Irene Adler being referred to in later stories as €œthat woman€ Vesper Lynd€™s legacy will manifest in Bond€™s apathy towards other women. This can definitely be seen in his treatment of both Bond girls in Quantum of Solace. Let€™s face it Arterton was mourned for a millisecond and Kurylenko didn€™t get a look in!